The thread for all things Cisco related

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"Yep, go by proxy.

www.proxy4free.com/page1.html
Pick a proxy server with port 80 or 8080, preferably anonymous, and copy the IP address of that server.

In Internet Explorer
Tools > Internet Options > Connections > Lan Settings > Tick "Use a proxy server for your LAN" and put in the address and port of the proxy you pick from that list.
Click OK.

If it doesnt work, go back in, take out the proxy, OK out again, pick another proxy, and try again"
 
anyway to change your ip address, to err... ahem bypass download limits
 
brother Abdul Qadir is much more knowledgeable

HAHA...nonsense..im taking icnd2 right now..maybe after the exam, u can say that!!! if it pass that is!!

OSPF:

Three major things:

1) Neighbours' information
2) Link state database exchange
3) SPF algorithm is ran against the Link state database info to calculate the best possible path to available subnets..=)

Nice effort creating this thread bro squiggle...
 
Nice effort creating this thread bro squiggle...

:thumbs_up I have a really great ICND1 - 2 / CCNA book and if any of you would like some information, I can scan as many pages as you would like.
 
HAHA...nonsense..im taking icnd2 right now..maybe after the exam, u can say that!!! if it pass that is!!

OSPF:

Three major things:

1) Neighbours' information
2) Link state database exchange
3) SPF algorithm is ran against the Link state database info to calculate the best possible path to available subnets..=)

Nice effort creating this thread bro squiggle...


LOL well I'm a right dope at this :statisfie hence the thread to try and become decent lol. I figured since I'm all ways on here it would be good to have something like this to refresh my brain :p

OSPF? that's a routing protocol? hmm I will memorise the 3 major things, what do you mean neighbour information? do you mean it has information about the routes that other routers have in the routing table?

2 and 3 are simple I think, when the packet is received and it's deciding upon the best path it runs an algorithem called SPF against the link stat database which is a database containing what? I'm guessing the link speed of all the interfaces/connections?
 
:thumbs_up I have a really great ICND1 - 2 / CCNA book and if any of you would like some information, I can scan as many pages as you would like.

cool brother are you doing networking also? or are you qualified now? :p
 
Well by the summer time, I plan on having a CCNA and I also plan on finishing school insha'Allah. I was hoping to get it earlier so I can get a job but all these non IT classes are taking up most of my time. I have more general ed. classes than I do IT classes. Its such a waste :exhausted
 
hmm I will memorise the 3 major things, what do you mean neighbour information?

2 and 3 are simple I think, when the packet is received and it's deciding upon the best path it runs an algorithem called SPF against the link stat database which is a database containing what? I'm guessing the link speed of all the interfaces/connections?

To be more accurate, its the neighbour's relationship..how is one particular router related to its neighbour?

yes..you are right about the 2nd and the 3rd theories..=)..keep it up...
 
Well by the summer time, I plan on having a CCNA and I also plan on finishing school insha'Allah. I was hoping to get it earlier so I can get a job but all these non IT classes are taking up most of my time. I have more general ed. classes than I do IT classes. Its such a waste :exhausted

I agree with u..i will take a degree insyallah, just for the cert sake..i dun have any interest in all the "extras"..lol...Im taking general IT...
 
So you're saying you're wireless computer doesn't have an IP address? Sorry I can be slow sometimes.

Of coz it has..the wireless router and the pc which uses it has the ip address....every item, e.g a pc, router, switch has two addresses...one is the hardware address which we call the mac address, the other is the 3rd layer network address which is called the ip address...when data are sent from a pc to router, it will need to find out both the hardware and network address of the intended destination. then, once the receiving end, the pc/router will first look at the mac address at the physical level. then, when it matches its own mac address, it will throw it up to the network layer confirm the intended ip address to send....
 
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Of coz it has..the wireless router and the pc which uses it has the ip address....every item, e.g a pc, router, switch has two addresses...one is the hardware address which we call the mac address, the other is the 3rd layer network address which is called the ip address...when data are sent from a pc to router, it will need to find out both the hardware and network address of the intended destination. then, once the receiving end, the pc/router will first look at the mac address at the physical level. then, when it matches its own mac address, it will throw it up to the network layer confirm the intended ip address to send....

Yes I know all that :p I'm not entirely sure what exactly it is she is having a problem with. I don't know if she is asking to change her IP address? Or if she is not getting assigned an IP address. I'm just going to wait and see if she can give more information.
 
This thread is for anything Cisco related, if you have a general question about networking or just want to discuss something regarding Cisco this is the thread for it. :p

Cisco!
Bring back the old days!
I was planning to get a certificate in Cisco but for some reasons I got busy with my own major studies and I stopped thinking about it. But I while I was doing my IS studies I took some Networking classes as free elective courses.

Is there any good place I can get the Cisco certificate online?
 
Cisco!
Bring back the old days!
I was planning to get a certificate in Cisco but for some reasons I got busy with my own major studies and I stopped thinking about it. But I while I was doing my IS studies I took some Networking classes as free elective courses.

Is there any good place I can get the Cisco certificate online?

www.pearsonvue.com
 
Here are some questions from the ICND1 book. Keep in mind that some questions have more than one answer. I'll post the answers after you're done. There is a total of 36 chapters. 18 chapters from the ICND1 book and another 18 from the ICND2 book. This right here is ICND1 material.

Routing Protocol Concepts and Configuration

1. Which of the following must be true for a static route to be installed in a router’s IP routing table?

a. The outgoing interface associated with the route must be in an “up and up” state.
b. The router must receive a routing update from a neighboring router.
c. The ip route command must be added to the configuration.
d. The outgoing interface’s ip address command must use the special keyword.


2. Which of the following commands correctly configures a static route?

a. ip route 10.1.3.0 255.255.255.0 10.1.130.253
b. ip route 10.1.3.0 serial 0
c. ip route 10.1.3.0 /24 10.1.130.253
d. ip route 10.1.3.0 /24 serial 0


3. Which of the following routing protocols are considered to use distance vector logic?

a. RIP
b. IGRP
c. EIGRP
d. OSPF


4. Which of the following routing protocols are considered to use link-state logic?

a. RIP
b. RIP-2
c. IGRP
d. EIGRP
e. OSPF
f. Integrated IS-IS


5. Which of the following routing protocols support VLSM?

a. RIP
b. RIP-2
c. IGRP
d. EIGRP
e. OSPF
f. Integrated IS-IS


6. Which of the following routing protocols are considered to be capable of converging quickly?


a. RIP
b. RIP-2
c. IGRP
d. EIGRP
e. OSPF
f. Integrated IS-IS


7. Router1 has interfaces with addresses 9.1.1.1 and 10.1.1.1. Router2, connected to Router1 over a serial link, has interfaces with addresses 10.1.1.2 and 11.1.1.2. Which of the following commands would be part of a complete RIP Version 2 configuration on Router2, with which Router2 advertises out all interfaces, and about all routes?

a. router rip
b. router rip 3
c. network 9.0.0.0
d. version 2
e. network 10.0.0.0
f. network 10.1.1.1
g. network 10.1.1.2
h. network 11.0.0.0
i. network 11.1.1.2


8. Which of the following network commands, following a router rip command, would cause RIP to send updates out two interfaces whose IP addresses are 10.1.2.1 and 10.1.1.1, mask 255.255.255.0?

a. network 10.0.0.0
b. network 10.1.1.0 10.1.2.0
c. network 10.1.1.1. 10.1.2.1
d. network 10.1.0.0 255.255.0.0
e. network 10
f. You cannot do this with only one network command.


9. What command(s) list(s) information identifying the neighboring routers that are sending routing information to a particular router?

a. show ip
b. show ip protocol
c. show ip routing-protocols
d. show ip route
e. show ip route neighbor
f. show ip route received


10. Review the snippet from a show ip route command on a router:

R 10.1.2.0 [120/1] via 10.1.128.252, 00:00:13, Serial0/0/1

Which of the following statements are true regarding this output?


a. The administrative distance is 1.
b. The administrative distance is 120.
c. The metric is 1.
d. The metric is not listed.
e. The router added this route to the routing table 13 seconds ago.
f. The router must wait 13 seconds before advertising this route again.
 
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To be more accurate, its the neighbour's relationship..how is one particular router related to its neighbour?

yes..you are right about the 2nd and the 3rd theories..=)..keep it up...

Nice to see the thread active :p I've got a question for you guys, in the first semester we did CCNA exploration Version 4 Network Fundamentals but I didn't read any of the material in the chapters and fluked the exam with 58% :hmm:

anyway i learnt my lesson and this semester I'm keeping up with reading the chapters and making noties. But I was wondering do you think the stuff covered in Network Fundamentals will come up in CCNA Exploration 4 0 ERouting exam?

You see I'm doing a degree and it's all internal we don't actually get the cisco qualification :(

for the questions above, lets see how much I get right :p

1. c
2. a
3. a (note to self distance vector logic is a metric that determines the past bath according to the distance correct guys? :p)
4. don't know
5. b (VLSM was released because they were running out of IP addresses so in order to fix this issu VLSM was released, but now they are going to release IP V6.) RIP v1 doesn't support VLSM does it guys?
6. D
7. no clue need to learn about ip addressing and subnetting :(
8. don't know :(
9. don't know :(
10. hmm is it saying the administrative distance is 120?


guys how does VLSM work, my teacher said it subnets better or somethinig but I didn't understand him :(

convergance is when all the routers work together or something?

Does any1 know an easy way to learn subnetting? like a really simplified explanation? :(
 
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